The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942, January 02, 1942, Page 8, Image 8

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    56,000 Baffled By Beaver Win
Over Duke, 20-16, in Durham
Rose Clash, Durdan Paces OSC
Duke OSC
First down IS
Nat yds. rushing .222
Net ycU. passing 73
F'w'di att'pfd IB
F'w'di completed .... 5
F'w'ds lnt'c'pfd by
Ydi. gain'd Int'c'pt'n 40
Ydi. kicki rat'n'd ...121
Ball lott en I'nVbl's.. 3
VA. nanallud- 23
14
154
148
IS
5
4
17
79
1
20
?unts bt. fr'm ier 48.4 47.8
MAJOR INDIVIDUAL
STATISTICS
Dukai TCB
NYQ Ave.
80 8.7
25 2.8
124 10.3
Davis 12
Blegirled .. 8
Lach 12
Oragon
Stata: TCB NYO Are.
Dathmaa .11 42 3.8
Durdan 17 43 2.3
Dar 18 27 1.4
Gray . 2 28 14.0
Lagandt TCB Timaa car
Had ball NYO Nat yardi
galnad.
Horse Pen
May Be Cage
Meet Site
SALEM. Jan. I W) There la
a distinct possibility that the
state high school basketball
tournament next March will be
held In the horse show building
at the state fairgrounds, Instead
of in the Willamette university
gymnasium, where it has been
held for 23 years, Sports Editor
Ron Gemmell of the Oregon
Statesman said today.
The building would seat 8000,
but capacity could be increased
to 16,000 if additional seats were
Installed. The Willamette gym
nasium seats about 2500.
It would cost $3500 to Install
a removable floor in the horse
how building and to install cas
ket stands.
Gemmell said it is almost cer
tain that the tournament would
start March 10, a day early, mak
ing the meet last four days in
stead of three. This would make
It unnecessary to have more
than four games a day.
Alabama
Ags, 29-21
'Jimmy Nelson Paces
Tide to Cotton Win
v Br TOM W. MILLER
: DALLAS, Tex, Jan. 2 (UP)
Alabama outscored the Texas
Aggies 29 to 21 in a wild and
w o o 1 y, what's-going-to-happen
next Cotton Bowl game Thurs
day and the difference was Jim
my Nelson, 180 pounds of foot
ball fury.
They call him "Old Tater
Head" down in Alabama and he
bent his noggin this chill, sun
ny afternoon and thrilled 38,000
With ramming, twisting touch
down runs of 72, 21, and 8
yards.
Alabama won this ball game
its fourth victory in six bowl
appearances with an offensive
record of one first down, 59
yards gained from scrimmage,
one pass completed, and 16
yards made through the air.
Trailing seven to nothing, the
Tide surged back in the second
period just four minutes after
the Texans had counted with
their favorite weapon a pass
Into the flat zone. Little Leo
Daniels was both the goat and
the hero of the first two touch
downs.
A Tense Moment'
Is Washed Away
NEW ORLEANS. Jan. 2 UP)
Thar war many tens mo
ments In the Sugar bowl
game between Fordham and
Missouri, but Chief Clerk Har
ry Reilly of the police depart
ment had one of his own.
A man approached one of
the stadium gates with a large
sised package which was leak
ing. Police had been instruct
ed to inspect all packages and
bundles.
' Reilly stopped the man, un
wrapped the package and
found 24 cans of baer. Reilly
' opened two cans. It was beer,
all right. The spectator was
Allowed to enter the stadium
-with his 22 unopened cans. .
CONTRIBUTIONS
NEW YORK, Jan. 2 (JP)
Football fans who attend the
game between the Chicago Bears
and the National league All
Stars for navy relief Sunday
won't be alone in their contri
butions to the gate.
Checks amounting to more
than $300 have been received
at naval relief society headquar
ters In the past few days. Offi
cials say most of the letters
contain checks of $1 to $5 and
are from persons In the middle
and far west who could not see
the game, ft
State Underdogs Win
In Rain-Pelted Tiff
CORVALLIS, Jan. 3 (IP) Oregon State's football players
are the world's champions in the eyes of their home town
fans.
The holiday-deserted campus blossomed with scattered
groups of cheering students and townspeople yesterday and
the high spirits engendered by the 20 to 16 win over Duke
remained today.
Acting President F. A. Gilfillan headed the long list of
backers who sent congratulatory telegrams from here, and
Governor Sprague Joined from Salem.
, Gilfillan acclaimed the victory as another triumph for "a
whole squad of stars."
By JACK GUENTHER
DURHAM, N. C Jan. 2 (UP)
In a thrill-a-minute game which
had to be seen to be believed,
Oregon States' team of destiny
Thursday wrote the happy end
ing into the rags-to-riches foot
ball story of 1941.
Ridiculed as a strict defense
unit which couldn't run, couldn't
pass and couldn't spark up a
fighting spirit, the twice beaten
Pacific champions proved their
ability to do all three by turning
back the finest team in Duke
history for a tingling, 20-16 win
in the "exiled" 28th renewal of
the Rose bowl classic.
They call the Oregon boys
Beavers, and a busy bunch of
critters they were. They skipped
and rammed and flicked passes
with an ease and a finesse which
completely baffled the record
crowd of 56,000 persons who
thronged the bowl's temporary
home in Duke stadium.
The Beavers baffled Duke
pretty thoroughly, too. First they
doggedly marched 52 yards in
the opening period for the touch
down and conversion which put
them in front, 7-0. Then they
broke up a 7-7 tie in the third
with a long run and a long pass
which carried them 55 yards to
a second score for another lead
at 14-7.
Looped a Pats
Duke came back to knot the
count a second time at 14-14 a
few minutes later, but once again
the Beavers convinced the rain
pelted crowd that they could be
just as good as they wanted to
be. They ran back the kick-off
22 yards, picked up five more
on a penalty then put on' the
play of the day f or cjincsher. .
Bobby Dethman, one of the
many thorns Duke found in this
Rose bowl game, faded back
way back and looped a soft,
wobbly pass to Gene Gray. The
latter was surrounded by Duke
defenders, but he dodged, ' he
ducked and he didn't stop until
the play had covered 62 yards
for the winning touchdown.
Those are the bare facts of
the 1942 playing of the grand
daddy of all the New Years day
games, but you could scatter
superlatives from now, until next
December and you couldn't do
justice to the wildest and wool
iest game the city of Durham,
N. C, ever saw or is likely to
see again.
Oregon walked on the field
rated as a 1-3 underdog and
drew hardly a cheer but soon
produced plenty of gasps. They
hit Tom Davis, who took the
opening klckoff for Duke, so
hard that he fumbled. They
kept the ball for all but a min
utes of the period and climaxed
a 52-yard drive by breaking Don
Durdan 15 yards for a touch
down after lining up for a fake
pass formation.
When Duke did get the ball.
Easterners Will Lick West,
Says Mascot Jerry Glynn
By ROMNEY WHEELER
NEW ORLEANS, Jan. 2 UP)
Little Jerry Glynn says the East
will win and that ought to tell
most people where to put the
blue chips in tomorrow's 17th
annual Shrine East-West charity
all-star football game.
Jerry, a 14-year-old kid who
looks no bigger than a minute,
is the East's self-appointed mas
cot. If his luck is as good as it
has been in the past, . the East
erners have the decision wrapped
up and packed away before they
ever go onto the turf of Sugar
bowl stadium. For Jerry never
has been with a losing team.
His latest Job was helping his
high school football team win a
scholastic championship, and he
can reel off other achievements
if you give him half a chance.
Butler Upsets
Taller Beaver
Quint. 35-29
INDIANAPOLIS. Jan. 2 UP1
A speedy Butler university bas
ketball team last night upset the
Oregon State Beavers, 35-29, de
spite a height advantage enioved
by the Beavers. Butler led at
halftime, 21-8.
John Mandlc. Oregon State
center, led scoring with 12
points, followed by Forwards
Norris Bnd Schumacher of But
ler with 10 and 8, respectively.
the Blue Devils flashed the pow
er which carried them to nine
straight victories and the south'
em conference championship.
After Oregon had put on a sec
ond drive and raced to the Duke
21 before losing the ball, the
home team zipped 70 yards In
nine plays to tie up the ball
game the first time.
Davis and Big Steve Lach
gained 65 yards by themselves,
with Lach reversing around end
for four yards and the touch
down. Bob Gantt added the
point, and although the Blue
Devils had first down on the
five yard line when the gun
ended the half neither team
scored again until the thrill-
packed third period produced
three touchdowns.
Oregon made the first, and
the stands wailed in dismay
again. After driving 64 yards
only to be held on the Duke 11,
the orange-shirt ed northerners
moved 55 yards in three plays.
Gray skirted his left end for 24
yards then Dethman passed 30
yards to George Zellick and
Warren Simas again added the
point Then, in four minutes
time, the game went into an up
roar. Duke took the kickoff to its
36 and Lach used that deadly
reverse for 39 yards to the State
25. Hrere Oregon was penalized
24 yards for roughness and Win
ston Siegfried plunged for the
score on the first try and Tom
Prothro converted, making it a
deadlock again, this time at 14
14. But State was far from thru,
and a minute later the Beavers
were in front a third time.
Statistic Edge
It was Dethman pitching again
this time , on that 62-yard gain
to Gray and the safety scored
by Duke late in the fourth
quarter when Mike Karamazin
tackled Don Durdan behind his
goal wasn't enough to catch up
with the 20 Oregon points. The
game in effect ended with that
Dethman-Gray aerial, but every
last one of the 56,000 spectators
stayed to witness a hectic finish.
Th ltneuv:
Duka
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Wlckrtt
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Greenonrti
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Satwrftra
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lacri .
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Oregon SUt .
ToaeMcnmi Dnrdin. Lrh. Rife-fried.
flrty, MIWc Point fter tonehaVrwn
rimm, z, Gintt. Prothro. Safety Dordan
(Uc-kM by Karmaxlo).
3'initltmfl (Duke) End nernnwr.
SatiU. Tackle JUnnl. Biding. Giard
Pooie, aUpiramn, F&wcett. Ontr Beatty.
Back Tjonc. Boklaikr. Rut. Storer. (Or
arm fttate) fend Pefryman, GaatafRoa.
Tacklf Bain, Cteeh. Oaarrja Parker,
ZMaakovkl. Onter nemenU Back
51 man, Gray. Ltbhe, Bhelton.
Rfr ii 81 an. California. TTmnlra.
Ou 1MI. Witconiln. FtM )nd(t B. T.
faun den, W and L. Linesman DotigJaa
Lowell. College) of Idaho.
He adopted the East team at
Biloxi, Miss., when it opened
training 10 days ago. That first
afternoon he learned all the
names, weights, positions and
schools of the all-star squadmen,
and now Is a walking encyclo
pedia of who's who and what's
what with the team.
Lon Stiner Happy His "Boys
Showed 'Em' How Coast Plays
DURHAM, N. a, Jan. 2
(UP) Youthful Lon Stiner,
who arrived from the west
coast eight days ago complain
ing that his Oregon State foot
ball squad was underrated,
smiled happily in the dressing
room Thursday night and said
quietly that he was glad "the
boys showed 'em."
"I guess everybody knows
now that we play in a mighty
tough league," Stiner said as
he guarded the dressing room
door against milling crowd
of well wishers. "The boys
played fine football. I think
we looked pretty good out
there today, against a great
Duke team." .
Stiner was unwilling to sin
gle out any member of his
31-man squad for individual
praise. , .
; "They all deserve all the ;
Fordham
Captures
Sugar, 2-0
73,000 Watch Safety Nip
Missouri in Rain Drenched
Contest at New Orleans
NEW ORLEANS, Jan. 2 (UP)
Through a blanding sheet of rain,
two big mnroon-Jerseyed linemen
poured on top of a Missouri
punter in the first six minutes of
the Sugar Bowl game Thursday
and the kick bounded around bo-
hind the goal line and became a
safety which gave Fordham a 2-0
victory over the Big Six cham
pions. The lone score of one of the
wierdest football games ever
played came with dramatic sud
denness and the horrible weath
er conditions prevented most of
the 73,000 spectators from see
ing what happened. The few who
did see what happened didn't
understand it.
With rain coming down in
sheets and torrents and Mis
souri back on its own 10-yard
line Don Greenwood, Tiger sub
stitute end, dropped back to punt
out on third down. He barely got
the ball in his hands when Alex
SantiUi, 195-pound tackle from
Everett, Mass., came tearing in.
As the wet ball left Greenwood's
toe, it bounded into Santllll's
chest and careened crazily
around the end zone as Fordham
and Missouri players clutched at
it with muddy fingers.
Stanley Ritinski, 185-pound
left end from Luzerne, Pa., got
to it first. He dived at the rain
slogged ball and had it almost
in his possession. But he was
slithering across the Tuddy end
zone at about the same time he
got possession of the ball.
It All Happened
Ritinski and the ball finally
wound up across the end zone
line. The only question was
whether Ritinski had possession
of the ball before he went out
of the end zone. The officials
ruled he didn't. Therefore, the
flay was ruled a safety giving
Fordham two points.
It all happened at 5 minutes
and 29 seconds in the first per
iod. The rest of the way the mud
caked players battled with might
and main to score, but neither
was able to cross the other's 19.
The heralded offensive kick of
both teams was bottled and
corked by the most atrocious
weather imaginable. The rain
held off until a minute before
the game started. With the sun
still shining, it began to sprinkle.
Before many minutes, the rain
was coming down in silver sheets
that drenched players and spect
ators alike. It continued to rain
during most of the game, and
at one time in the third period
a scattering of hall stones also
peppered the bowl.
Missouri made two heroic ef
forts to pull the game out of the
fire in the second half. On the
kickoff Bob Steuber, Tigers' big
right halfback, almost broke
away, racing to Fordham's 48 on
a 34-yard run. Next, Steuber ran
to the Rams' 20 but he was called
back to the 33 for having stepped
out of bonds.
Panthers Face
Malin Quintet
Friday Night
CHILOQUIN The Chlloquln
high Panthers will open their after-vacation
league schedule on
Friday night when they enter
tain the visiting Malin high
Mustangs on the local court. The
locals, with successive victories
over Bonanza, Henley and Bly,
loom as favorites for the com
ing tilts, but sports fans know
that a hard game is always in
store for the Panthers whenever
they play Malin.
During the vacation, the
Panthers, after leading during
practically the whole game, lost
a close one to the alumni. Coach
Ted Schopf has been engaged
this week in ironing out the
rough spots as shown In the
alumni game and will have the
locals at full strength for the
Panther-Mustang fracas. A pre
liminary between the "B" teams
of the two schools will start at
7:30 with the "varsitv" game
scheduled to start at 8:30.
credit anyone can give them,"
he said, adding that Oregon
State played "one of Its beat
games" in trimming the finest
Duke team In history for the
Beavers', first Rose Bowl tri
umph. "We wanted to win this one
more than any game I can re-
member," he declared,, .
Somcene asljed him "what
was the matter" with 'Oregon
State's pass defense on the
long Duke aerials.
"What do you mean, what's
the matter?" Stiner demand
ed. "Right now, I don't be
lieve there's anything the mat
ter with anything."
The players, who came
through the battle with only
minor bruises, were too tired
to be hilarious in the dressing
! i ,u nssini Mini I I ijaa i II mmmmtmwmmamWH'mmmmmmmmmm!fT
. 3-...V ;-a"v. , . '-vrtEF at
r.-.taiw ' n laa llfi 'I in i ari Uliliai -'"-I'm m i urn mmmm mil iii i "'
Wildcats Billed for
Charity Prelim Tiff
Klamath Secondaries Face Powerful
Chiloquin Panthers Saturday Night
The undefeated Klamath Union high school Wildcats will
clash with the strong Chlloquln B league Panthers In a prelimin
ary to the main Pelican-Alumni charity encounter Saturday niiilit
in the KUHS gym, it was announced Friday.
The tilt will pit Coach Wayne Scott's powerful little band,
which has already conquered Merrill, 1941 B loop titlists. against
a Panther five which Is favored to cop the crown this winter.
Half of the funds raised from proceeds of the game will be
turned over to tho National Foundation tor Infantile Paralysis,
Inc. The other half will remain
In Klamath county to administer
to local needs.
The game is part of a nation
wide sports events campaign to
combat a disease which has re
sulted In the untimely death of
First Basemart Lou Gehrig of
the New York Yankees In the
sports realm and of many others
in every walk of life.
On the Alumni roster will be
Marlon Reginato, Pat Moses and
Bob Erlandson, members of last
year's outstanding Pelican quin
tet, Wes Lorenz, Ray Crane,
George Cooley, Harold Elttrclm
and Paul Crapo, all former
KUHS cagers. Reginato, Erland
son and Lorenz are currently
Georgia Plasters
TCU in Miami, 40-26
Fireball Frank Sinkwich Passes,
Runs Bulldogs to Topheavy Victory
By JOHN B. McRERMOTT
MIAMI, Fla., Jan. 2 (UP)
Fireball F r a n k i e Sinkwich,
Georgia's all-American halfback,
staged the greatest one-man
show ever seen in Miami's
Orange Bowl Thursday as ho led
his red-shirted mates to a spec
tacular 40-28 victory over Texas
Christian before 35,505 fans.
Sinkwich did everything but
make the ball talk in one of the
stand-out aerial battles of the
season. He sparked Georgia's
three-touchdown first-period as
sault which put the Bulldogs
out in front 19-7. And only
in the final quarter, when he
was taken out of the game for
a rest, did the TCU attack click.
The Texans scored two touch
downs in a last period spurt
and were on Georgia's 8-yard
line when the final gun sound
ed. Bucks Over
Georgia rolled up 13 first
downs to eight for TCU and
room, but complacent grins
told their reaction.
Coach Wallace Wade of
Duto appeared at the Oregon
State dressing room 10 min
utes after the final gun to
shake hands with Stiner and
the Oregon players.
"Oregon State played a fine
game" he told reporters as he
left. "That Don Durdan is
really great."
Stiner said his squad would
leave at midnight for New1
Orleans where they will wit
ness the east-west game on
Saturday. They will arrive
home in Corvallls, Ore., Jan
uary 8.
"But first we're all going
to have a victory dinner to
gether tonight," Stiner pro
claimed. "We need a celebra
tion because that Duke team
can scare you to death."
playing on cither Oregon or Ore
gon State frosh teams.
Dutch French, Pelican cusaba
pilot, said Friday that his regu
lar starting lineup of Gene Love,
George Brostcrhous, Jim Cox,
Ingvar Swanson and Jim Bocchl
ore In excellent physical and
mental shape after continuous
practice through the holidays.
The Bigbills face Grants Puss to
night on the valley team's court.
The Wildcat-Chiloquln contest
will start at 7 o'clock and tho
main tiff at eight. Admission
will bo 35 cents for adults and
13 cents for students and chll-
dren.
only once was behind. In the
early stages of the first quarter,
TCU took a 7-8 lead, but was
soon left behind by the fast
moving red shirts from Athens,
Cn.
Georgia scored before the
'gamo was five minutes old after
Sinkwich passed to Lamar Dav
is for nine yards on tho TCU 30
and tho fleet-footed ,winRbnck
fought his way to the 10-yard
stripe, Sinkwich picked up sev
en yards through the line, with
Ken Keuper bucking over. Cos
ta's attempted conversion was
blocked.
The Horned Frogs came back
on a break a few moments lat
er, Kyle Gillespie, TCU's star
back, plunging over from the
four. The ploy had been set
up when Davis fumbled on his '
own 22 and the Texans recov-:
ered. A pass, Gillespie to :
Frank Krlng, was ruled com
plete on the five because of
interference. Frank Medanlch's
kick was good.
Once again the Georgia fire
ball took over. Sinkwich passed
29 yards to Conger on tho Tex
ans' 32 after the kickoff, and
the fast stepping Bulldog raced
tho rest of the way to score.
Jimmie Stewart
Wins Promotion
To 2nd Lieutenant
MOFFETT FIELD, Calif., Jan.
2 (P) It used to bo James
Stewart, screen actor, then Cor
poral Stewart, but today It's
Second Lieut. Stewart, USA.
After studying war depart
ment extension courses for sev
eral months, tho motion picture
star was commissioned a second
lieutenant yesterday without
ceremony.
Lieut, E. L. Rcld, personnel
officer at this army post, be
stowed the commission and said
Lieut. Stewart would be as
signed to duty with the west
coast air training center.
The screen star learned to fly
an airplane before ho was draft
ed into the arnfy last March 22.
PAGE EIGHT
Big Mass College Athletic
Program Launched for War
By CHARLES DUNKLEY
DETROIT, Jan. 2 P The greatest mass athletic program In
American college history was launched today In the Interest of
physical fitness and wartime morale.
Tho Intensive program was drmnndvd of the nation's football
coaches ond athletic leaders by Elwood A. Gelges ot Philadelphia,
newly appointed executive to John B. Kelly, United States di
rector of physical fitness.
Gelges Jolted the athletic leaders Into action by declaring that
the physical condition of the nation's men was deplorable; that 80
per cent of those examined for
military service could not oc
accepted because of their sub
normal condition, and that It wus
time the colleges and universities
realized the Importance of "com
pulsory competitive ond non
competitive activities."
"Unless the deplorable phy
sical defects are corrected,"
Gelges warned, "our military
and naval forces will be un
necessarily hampered In the
creation of an efficient fighting
machine."
Gelges' demand was for com
pulsory physical education and
athletics for all students so they
would bo prepared for tho rigors
of military duty, when and If
called.
Gelges carried his demand to
the College Physical Education
association, which is meeting
here concurrently with the Na
tional Collegiate Athletic asso
ciation and tho American Foot
ball Coaches association. His
plan calls for expansion rather
than obrldgement of collego ath
letics. '
In response, the athletic lead
ers who came to Detroit with a
wartime question program of
"what will the government ex
pect us to do?" pledged whole
heartedly to plungo Immediately
into an expansion of athletics
and physical education, with em
phasis on mass participation
rather than spectator interest.
There will be no curtailment of
football schedules next fall, or
baseball next spring or of any
other sports.
SOFTWOOD LUMBER
Grading Sketches :
Tries sketches were compiled for my own use wheh
studying grading and a revised edition is now offered
to the lumbering Industry for the use of lumbermen and
students Interested in lumber grading.
The book contains:
148 sketches of VA Inch and thicker Shop
lumber No. 3 clear, No. 1 Shop, No. 2 Shop
and No. 3 Shop, showing cuts, their size, de- :"
scrlptlon and values In numerous combinat
ions. . ' ;
48 sketches o'f Finish type lumber Nos. 1 1
and 2 Cleor, C Select and D Select. ' '
22 sketches of one-Inch Factory lumber No. ' 'l
3 Clear and one-inch Shop.
94 sketches of No. 1 to No. 5 Common boards.
The book Is. composed of shxty-five pages of heavy
paper 10xl3'2 Inches; flat-opening plastic binding; sub
stantial cloth cover, gold stamped. . .
PRICE $6.00 COPY
Compiled and Published by,
A.J. KEHOE
P. 0. Box 92, Modoc Point, Ore.
On Sale At
Shaw Stationery Co.
via Li m. . ' l ,,
729
January 2. 194?
Tulsa University
Noses Out Tough
Texas Tech, 6-0
EL PASO, Texas. Jan. 2 (UP)
Lanky Glenn Dobbs. whose pass
ing threats were turned back for
threo periods, finally connected
for two strikes In a row Thursday
and tossed Tulsa university to
a 8-0 victory over Texas Tech
in the Sun bowl.
A crowd of 14,000 saw the
Tulsa tailback take charge in
the closing minutes of the game
and put on an aerial exhibition
that broke a scoreless deadlock.
Dobbs started the payoff drive
from tho Tulsa 40, completing
a couple that moved the ball to
Tcxos Tech's 31. Then he un
corked a rifle pass that Saxon
Judd, Tulsa right end, gathered
In on the 13. Just as he caught
It two Tech players, Robblns and
Callahan, grabbed for him, but
Judd shook them off and scorxW
standing up. Dobbs' kick w0
blocked
and that was tho ball
gamo.
NEW YORK, Jon. 2 UP) Jo
Louis, who holds that eating Is
a much better pastime than
fighting, celebrated Now Year's
by helping devour a turkey and
postponing any ring activity
until todoy.
The heavyweight champion,
who meets Buddy Baer in a na
val relief match Jnnuary 9,
Jogged five miles in roadwork.
Main St.